Army veterinarian tired of being thanked for her service

SAN ANTONIO, Texas — A U.S. Army veterinarian says she is sick of the veteran accolades she gets every time she goes out in public, since she’s never deployed or cared for so much as one ass-raped goat in Afghanistan, sources confirmed.

“I go out for a simple Chick-fil-A Spicy Deluxe Sandwich and the next thing you know there’s a JROTC honor guard marching to the cash register,” says Capt. Andrea Martinez.

“Sure, I joined — I like the idea of national service and the Army has helped foot my vet school bills. But this shit has got to stop.”

Martinez is fully aware that people mistake her title for service members who have “been in the mix,” “in the shit,” and “outside the wire,” according to the public’s usual standard for veteran status, but, she added: “I’m a veterinarian, not a veteran, and I’m not even trained on goats, so what the hell would I know about beastiology in the first place?”

Still, Martinez hopes to deploy soon, since she wants to overcome the stigma that accompanies Army veterinarians who spend their careers in the continental United States taking care of general officers’ gerbils on the down-low.

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Lieutenant Dan contributes to Duffel Blog. He also previously served as the lowest-ranking ever Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and as the smartest-ever US Ambassador to NATO, which isn't saying much according to his mom. He is a noted expert on Nothing, and served for decades as a mid-level supervisor in the Federal Dept. of Nothing. In his spare time, he rescues puppies and sings them to sleep with Air Force lieutenant songs like, "Trust the System," and "Don't Fall Out of Formation."